Ontario Budget Marks Major Advocacy Wins for Ontario’s Engineers

QUEEN’S PARK– Ontario’s first balancedbudget in a decade was released on Thursday, April 27th by Minister Charles Sousa, containing updates and new spending measures that impact Ontario’s engineers.

Based on the recommendations from OSPE’s 2017 submission to the Minister of Finance Charles Sousa, the provincial budget marked a number of important advocacy wins for Ontario’s engineers and engineering students, and is yet another clear indication of OSPE’s increasing influence with government.

$26B for the development and repair of 400-series highways and in northern Ontario

Double the share of gas taxes for municipalities, providing funding for transit infrastructure

Funding for an Environmental Assessment for high-speed rail in the Toronto-Kitchener-London-Windsor corridor

Establish an Autonomous Vehicle Innovation Network, and continued commitment to electric and hydrogen vehicle advancement program

Recently quoted in ReNew Canada, OSPE CEO Sandro Perruzza says, “It was great to see infrastructure investments and Highly Skilled Workforce initiatives catapulted into the top-five areas of spending growth. Adding the now doubled allotment of gas tax funding to municipalities, the cumulative flow of funds to infrastructure projects is significant. That’s good for Ontario and it will create new opportunities for a lot of our members.”

Other notable investments include $21M over three years to support the Ontario Bridge Training program. As OSPE’s 2015 labour market report revealed, only 21% of International Engineering Graduates (IEGs) worked as engineers or engineering managers. Continued government investment in programs like OSPE’s Exam Skills Preparation course has the potential to improve the labour market outcomes for IEGs, as well as support Ontario’s knowledge economy.

OSPE Vice Chair Jonathan Hack, P.Eng. notes, “I’m really pleased that the government has provided funding that will allow engineering graduates to gain on-the-job experience through programs such as the Ontario Centre of Excellence’s Talent Edge and MITACS Accelerate. It is important that we continue to invest in programs that enable engineering students and graduates to get that crucial ‘first job’ on their resumes, so they can then build upon that experience and enjoy a career in engineering, right here in Ontario.”

In the coming months, OSPE looks forward to continuing to work with decision-makers at Queen’s Park to address areas that were not included in the provincial budget, such as the Ring of Fire, and elevating the profile of Ontario’s engineers.

I joined this site a few days ago hoping to find that Engineers are contributing to a better Ontario through their applied scientific Expertise. Instead, I find an Advocy group that petitions governments for more funding for works that will provide engineers with more taxpayer funded initiatives.

Most of what is wrong in Ontario (and Canada) today is the lack of respect for taxpayers, private businesses & entrepreneurs, and the autonomy of citizens to make their own choices in their lives without a paternalistic, socialist cadre of political and academic elites prescribing an ever-increasing set of limits in the lives of each citizen (note: Ontario government regulations have doubled to 360,000 in the last 20 years alone and the public bureaucracy & public debt has matched its growth)

Celebrate your engineering successes! Your advocacy is boring in comparison and you will accomplish little in the face of such an overwhelmingly dominant state hegemony.